Just a few of the many films I have watched many times and will watch again, and again, and again....
Trees Lounge (1996)
Steve Buscemi's directorial debut is an understated masterpiece; funny, brilliantly acted, realistic, beautifully detailed and gently sad. More people should watch it.
The Big Lebowski (1998)
Millions of people have watched The Big Lebowski and with good reason; the Coen brothers' funniest movie. This also has best-ever performances by Jeff Bridges, John Goodman and Julianne Moore, beautiful photography and a great soundtrack. Plus an immortal performance from John Tutrurro!
The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
The best of the Star Wars movies by a mile; grittier, more dramatic, deeper emotional content, best showpieces - even George Lucas' so-called 'special edition' tampering failed to take the shine off of Irving Kershner's masterpiece.
Metropolitan (1990)
Whit Stillman doesn't make enough films; but those he makes are peeless. In some ways, Metropolitan is like an 80s teen movie set among the upper class debutantes of Manhattan, but even better than that sounds. As with Stillman's also-great Last Days of Disco Chris Eigeman steals the show.
Brazil (1985)
Completely different kind of sci-fi, probably Terry Gilliam's best film, with all of the trademarks of his style; stunning design (the retro-futurism of Brazil continues to be influential), eccentric characterisation, beautiful photography, grimness, humour and melancholy.
Freeway (1996)
Not a very good film, or a particularly well-made one (though it is very well acted mostly, especially by Reese Witherspoon) but on the level of pure trash cinema it works perfectly.
Goodfellas (1990)
Arguably not any better than Martin Scorcese's other career highs (Mean Streets, Taxi Driver, King of Comedy etc) but the best straight gangster movie there is.
Diary of a Lost Girl (1929)
GW Pabst made two masterpieces with Louise Brooks in 1928/9 - Pandora's Box may be better in many ways, but the more formulaic and melodramatic storyline makes Diary of a Lost Girl an easier film to watch 90-ish years later.
Ghost World (2001)
Probably the best comic-book adaptation to date, Terry Zwigoff captures the look and feel of Dan Clowes' sad and funny comic strip while also making a satisfying film.
Confessions (2010)
A unique and very Japanese mix of tragedy, comedy, teen horror and romance; and with a great soundtrack featuring Boris, Radiohead etc. Perfect.
Blade Runner (1982)
A candidate for best sci-fi movie of all time, Ridley Scott's masterpiece is cerebral, brilliantly directed, acted and photographed and with an almost psychopathic level of detail.
Mallrats (1995)
What was supposed to be Kevin Smith's big Hollywood debut after indie hit Clerks was something of a commercial flop; but it's his funniest movie by some distance and Jason Lee is forgiven as many Chipmunks movies as he wants to make because he will always be Brodie Bruce.
Breathless (2009)
Yang ik-June's directorial debut is something like a Korean Mean Streets; a realistic, gritty story of people you shouldn't like but do.
and many, many more.....
Sunday, 17 March 2013
A few of my favourite things 1: books
Just some of the books that obviously I could live without but would prefer not to... Beginning with books, simply because I mainly list records...
Ian MacDonald - Revolution in the Head: The Beatles' Records and the Sixties (1994)
Ian MacDonald writes about every song The Beatles ever recorded, in chronological order, and with a strong sense of historical context. Sounds kind of dry but is absolutely not. Sometimes a good book to disagree with ('Wait' is a song I do feel strongly about, whatever he says) but always and in every way a good book.
Ian McEwan - The Cement Garden (1978)
Morbid, creepy, strangely deadpan and unlike anything else (except for some of Ian McEwan's early short stories), this is a perfect little grim and dreamlike novel.
Charles Shaar Murray - Shots from the Hip (1991)
A collection of some of the journalism of possibly the best music writer of all time (certainly better than the overrated but actually pretty good Lester Bangs), Murray writes brilliantly about people like Bowie, but more importantly writes gripping articles about artists that no-one in their right mind would want to read about.
JRR Tolkien - The Lord of the Rings (1954-5)
Not much to say about this; loved the movies but the book will always be the real thing.
JD Salinger - The Catcher in the Rye (1951)
Ian MacDonald - Revolution in the Head: The Beatles' Records and the Sixties (1994)
Ian MacDonald writes about every song The Beatles ever recorded, in chronological order, and with a strong sense of historical context. Sounds kind of dry but is absolutely not. Sometimes a good book to disagree with ('Wait' is a song I do feel strongly about, whatever he says) but always and in every way a good book.
Ian McEwan - The Cement Garden (1978)
Morbid, creepy, strangely deadpan and unlike anything else (except for some of Ian McEwan's early short stories), this is a perfect little grim and dreamlike novel.
Charles Shaar Murray - Shots from the Hip (1991)
A collection of some of the journalism of possibly the best music writer of all time (certainly better than the overrated but actually pretty good Lester Bangs), Murray writes brilliantly about people like Bowie, but more importantly writes gripping articles about artists that no-one in their right mind would want to read about.
JRR Tolkien - The Lord of the Rings (1954-5)
Not much to say about this; loved the movies but the book will always be the real thing.
George Orwell – Collected Essays and Journalism (4 vols, 196?)
Probably the best pound I ever spent in a charity shop; these books include some of Orwell's greatest pieces of writing, including The Decline of the English Murder, Inside the Whale etc
Gardner Fox - Kothar: Barbarian Swordsman (1969)
Simple Conan rip-off perhaps, but DC comics writer Gardner Fox's Kothar books have a special something that makes them head-and-shoulders above the average swords & sorcery pulp fantasy.
Jake Adelstein - Tokyo Vice (2009)
Not just investigative journalism; Jake Adelstein writes stunningly about the Japanese newspaper industry, the yakuza, the police and the country itself.
William Shakespeare - Hamlet (c.1600)
Not that many plays are a gripping read, but I think Hamlet is - witty, clever and of course tragic.
Philip K Dick - Dr Bloodmoney, or How We Got Along After the Bomb (1965)
Grotesque and inventive, not the most representative (or best) of Philip K Dick's novels but a classic nonetheless.
Philip K Dick - Time Out of Joint (1959)
Very much one of his best and most representative straight(ish) sci-fi novels in which he managed the feat of writing in the 50s about 50s small-town America with a seeming sense of nostalgia.
Although it is kind of mystifying that this odd little novel became one of the classics of 20th century literature it is endlessly re-readable, unlike all of the author's other books.
Haruki Murakami - After Dark (2004)
Somehow hypnotic mix of realism and fantasy, hugely atmospheric even in translation.
Cyril Connolly - The Rock Pool (1936)
The only novel by the literary critic; funny, delicate and strangely moving. One of my favourite books in the world, story-wise (but not tonally) somewhat similar to Christopher Isherwood's also-excellent Goodbye to Berlin, Stephen Spender's The Temple and even Hunter S. Thompson's The Rum Diary
Stephen King - It (1986)
Stephen King himself has said that It is too long; wrong. Shame about the film version though...
Peter Bagge - Hate (1990-1998)
Essentially a comic soap opera, Peter Bagge's Buddy Bradley is one of the great comic characters of all time, and the complete Hate saga is far more than just crude comedy.
Michael Moorcock - Dancers at the End of Time (1972-6)
Despite the fact that there are no boundaries to the imagination, most fantasy fiction is highly formulaic, but although Moorcock has written his fair share of standard (if excellent) swords & sorcery type stuff (the Corum series being maybe the best), Dancers at the End of Time is highly eccentric and otherworldly without simply being whimsical and annoying.
Evelyn Waugh - Vile Bodies (1930)
It turns out that the nasty sardonic humour that is nevertheless somehow very moving (a keynote of Waugh's first few novels) doesn't really translate to film. Sadly the sentimentality of Brideshead Revisited was easier to capture.
Michael Moynihan and Didrik Søderlind - Lords of Chaos - the Bloody Rise of the Satanic Metal Underground (1998)
A brilliantly researched and skilfully written book about Satanic music, beginning in the 60s and culminating in the church-burning Norwegian black metal scene of the 1990s. If the book sometimes seems a little sensationalistic, it's mainly because the bands and events described are 'larger than life' to say the least.
Wyndham Lewis - The Apes of God (1930)
A modernist satire on everything, The Apes of God is, like most of Lewis' fiction, initially offputting due to the denseness of his writing style, but formidably clever, very funny and kind of unpleasant. Despite his own peculiar fascist tendencies, Lewis mocks Oswald Moseley's blackshirts in this book as much as he does everyone else.
Robert Westall - The Watch House (1977)
Robert Westall is best known for his first novel The Machine Gunners but all of his books up until the late 80s are great, this one (first read when I was 11 or 12) being my favourite, and a children's book that is still easy to read as an adult. Actually, probably should have chosen The Scarecrows, which is possibly even better, but I'll stick with this.
Hunter S. Thompson - Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (1971)
Terry Gilliam's film version captures the hysterical intensity of the book; but it isn't as easy or fun to watch as the book is to read. Short, to the point and completely insane.
Saturday, 2 March 2013
More Hair Metal thoughts....
So-called “hair metal” is not my favourite
kind of music; it’s not even my favourite kind of metal – but the elements of accessibility/tunefulness,
sleaze/glamour and the anachronistic visual appeal (or otherwise) of the record
sleeves make it easy to be nostalgic about, and the best records are no worse
than those of any other specific niche genre. It’s also interesting to explore
as it was, for a couple of years, pretty pervasive both in itself and as an
influence on other music.
Glam metal was of course not the first glam
explosion, but nor was it simply a repeat of 1971-4 with younger bands; the
background of metal and punk, instrumental virtuosity and attitude was entirely
different, although the rebellion against musical boredom (Pink Floyd, Jethro
Tull, ELP in 1971, Jethro Tull, Dire Straits and the tail end of disco in ’81) and underlying
grimness (the death of flower power as protest, strikes & heroin in the
early 70s, right-wing politics and post-punk brutalist fashion in the early
80s) shared some parallels. Both were concerned ultimately with fun,
shallowness, image and sex, and therefore are as valid artistically as anything
else, especially if that anything is an epic concept album made by millionaires
with tortured souls.
It would be pointless to deny that the USA (and
very specifically LA) was the true home of glam metal, but its roots are more
wide ranging:
Europe
Although in many ways a pop-rock act, Finland’s Hanoi Rocks are
perhaps the true progenitors of 80s hair metal, their sleazy glam image (and
Michael Monroe’s prettiness) being as important an influence as their 70s,
Stones-ish rock was.
Australia
AC/DC (okay, the members’ Australian-ness is debatable but as a
band they definitely came from Australia) gave glam metal much of its
apparently simple riff-based anthemic quality, in addition to a fun,
panto-esque irreverence clothing-wise. Rose Tattoo were in some ways similar but
perhaps even more influential, not least on Guns ‘N’ Roses.
UK
Although the glam elements in UK metal in the 80s weren’t the
finest products of UK metal, much of the hair metal genre had its roots in the
70s UK glam explosion (The Sweet, Slade, Mott the Hoople, T-Rex), punk (Sex
Pistols for attitude), UK-based hard rock like Whitesnake, Rainbow, UFO, Deep Purple etc and of course the New Wave of
British Heavy Metal, although that movement (if you could call it a movement)
was on the whole fairly anti-glam. A key band here is Def Leppard, who were
widely derided by their UK contemporaries for their glossy, US-influenced
sound, but were definitely an influence on the more AOR Bon Jovi wing of hair
metal. Judas Priest’s leather & studs image was also taken on board by
bands like Mötley Crüe, albeit with more of a sense of post-Mad Max style
USA
The New York Dolls and Kiss are the most obvious American
influence on hair metal, both in sound and with their flamboyant visual flair,
although NY Dolls’ sleaziness was more convincing than that of Gene Simmons &
co. Aerosmith too were a key band, especially as, like Kiss, they joined the
younger generation, helping to shape hair metal during the 80s (see also Van
Halen & David Lee Roth). Another key influence in the late 70s was the rise
of soft, radio-friendly hard/soft rock like Journey, Boston & Anglo-American
and British contemporaries like
Foreigner and Supertramp.
Glam/hair
metal itself
When glam metal truly broke it was a genuinely international
movement; the US dominating to a degree, but bands from all over the world
played an almost equal part (key examples; Ratt – USA, Def Leppard - UK,
Scorpions – Germany, Europe – Sweden, White Lion – Denmark/USA).
The
pervasiveness of glam
The nice thing about glam or hair metal (depending on your point
of view) is that you could buy into it as much or as little as you wanted; semi dinosaur David Coverdale revived Whitesnake
with a post-Van Halen guitar player and some makeup and they became definitively
hair metal while hardly changing at all; actual dinosaurs like ZZ Top and
Rainbow wrote the most commercial, melodic music of their careers. Even resolutely
non-glam icons Iron Maiden’s Adrian Smith started to look more fashionable than
the rest of the band and released a very US-influenced solo album as ASAP (Silver & Gold),
while fellow NWOBHM-ers Raven made semi-okay glam albums like Stay Hard and The Pack is Back. Even goth rockers The Cult (always an image-heavy
band) embraced hard rock, making first the AC/DC-ish Electric
and then their masterpiece Sonic Temple;
Swiss death/black metal pioneers Celtic Frost bought into the image wholesale
and made one of the most peculiar and reviled of all hair metal albums, Cold Lake. It’s no coincidence either that many
of the heavier/punkier bands of this era, from Voivod to DRI to Anthrax made
their most accessible music during the period 1984-89.
There was a backlash of course; the heaviest bands got heavier,
more humourless; death and black metal and grindcore were spreading, but in the
end it wasn’t only glam that suffered around 1990; the whole of metal was to
evolve beyond recognition, leaving not only young bands like Skid Row and
Pretty Boy Floyd seeming out of time and place, but suddenly the NWOBHM seemed
as far off and quaint as the flower power era, the mighty Iron Maiden faltered,
along with the thrash bands who couldn’t or wouldn’t move with the times and
even the short-lived funk metal bands of 89-90 seemed antique by 1993 pr so.
Despite the neatness of the 'grunge-killed-metal' theory, a lot of
this had happened before grunge hit; in the interregnum, albums like Faith No
More’s The Real Thing (now easily as
dated as Warrant or Nelson), The Red Hot Chilli Peppers’ Mothers Milk and the emergence of bands as diverse as Prong,
Ministry, Pixies and White Zombie were making the 80s seem like a different era, as in
fact it was.
So what is left of hair metal is – like punk - a time capsule of
songs, videos and album sleeves; evocative, poignant even, and for those young
enough not to remember, either a source of bemusement or inspiration. But the
era of glam can never come again, except as a pastiche or tribute; nor would
one want it to, any more than a new ‘beat group’ explosion or new New Wave
movement. It’s been done, it’s still there and out of context it’s just plain
silly.
In
the pictures:
A cross-section of some of the hair metal albums in my collection;
not all classics.
PICTURE
1 (top of page)
Clockwise
from Top in a spiral (why not?):
Vixen
– Rev It Up ( EMI, 1990)
Second album by the most famous female hair metal band. Quality
songs throughout, but not very sleazy or attitude heavy; more like a metalled-up
Stevie Nicks than anything else, sentimental but rocking.
Vinnie
Vincent Invasion – S/T (Chrysalis,
1986)
Shrill, totally OTT, screeching glam from ex-Kiss “axeman”. Pretty
good actually but ex-Journey singer Robert Fleishman has a voice your dog will
hate.
Lionheart
– Hot Tonight (Epic, 1984)
Tatty but loveable attempt at radio rock by former Iron Maiden
guitarist Dennis Stratton. A half-decent production would have made all the
difference.
Living
Colour – Vivid (Epic, 1988)
Not true glam maybe but Vernon Reid’s take on melodic hard rock
was flamboyant, catchy and definitely image conscious.
Kix
– Cool Kids (Atlantic, 1983)
Not as glam (or as good) as some of their later stuff, but the
title track is pretty cool, naturally.
Mötley
Crüe – Theatre of Pain (Elektra,
1985)
By album number three, the glam legends were already sounding
tired, and this is a half-hearted, patchy record, albeit one with a classic in Home Sweet Home and their influential
cover of Smokin’ in the Boys Room on
it.
Yngwie
J Malmsteen’s Rising Force – Odyssey (Polydor,
1988)
Yngwie had made his name as a ‘proper’ metal guitarist but as soon
as he joined forces with Rainbow’s Joe Lynn Turner he became (briefly) a hair
metal artist. This album is packed with completely ridiculous but fun anthems.
LA
Guns – Cocked & Loaded (Vertigo,
1989)
LA Guns should have been
bigger; not only did they feature vocalist Phil Lewis of UK glam metal pioneers
Girl, they had Tracii Guns, one of the glammestly-named people ever and the ‘Guns’
of the original lineup of Guns ‘n’ Roses. This album is good.
Wolf
– Wolf (Mausoleum, 1984)
Atmospheric and melodic NWOBHM – a great, sadly obscure LP by Wolf
(aka Black Axe). Their only album and almost faultless.
Wrathchild
[UK] – Stakk Attak (Heavy Metal,
1984)
Despite taking their name from an Iron Maiden song, this band were
far more Gary Glitter (musically!) than NWOBHM – silly, simple rock anthems like
‘Trash Queen’ dominate; it’s great.
Loudness
– Hurricane Eyes (ATCO, 1987)
Stalwarts of Japanese metal, Loudness, like many bands the world
over, ‘turned hair’ in the mid-80s and this album, though not their best, is a
high quality release. There are Japanese and English language versions, either
is good.
Mötley
Crüe – Dr Feelgood (Elektra, 1989)
The band’s last good album until their reunion, this is
nevertheless a bit annoying; Kickstart my Heart is good though.
Nasty
Idols – Gigolos on Parole (HSM, 1989)
– peeking in at bottom right
Forgettable, over-slick Swedish glam – except for the immortal ‘Give Me What I Want’, as good a slab of
sleazy Euro-glam as you will ever hear.
Whitesnake
– 1987 (Geffen, 1987)
The albums leading up to this one, like Slide It In and Saints &
Sinners were almost hair metal, but with many behind-the-scenes lineup
issues and the recruitment of Dutch shredder Adrian Vandenberg, the band became
hair metal royalty with the release of this album; ‘Is This Love’, ‘Here I Go
Again’, ‘Still of the Night’.
Enough said.
Ratt
– Ratt EP (Time Coast, 1983)
Like all things Ratt, their debut ep is terminally patchy but
heavy on attitude, with the band projecting a ‘gay pirate’ feel on the back of
the sleeve. It does have the definitive version of ‘Back For More’ on it though, slappy bass and all.
Skid
Row – S/T (Atlantic, 1989)
One of the last great debuts
of the hair metal era, this was somewhat overrated at the time, but it
still stands up pretty well.
Poison
– Open Up And Say...Ahh !(Enigma,
1988)
Much maligned glam superstars earned the displeasure of millions
with the inclusion of the hideous ‘Every
Rose Has Its Thorn’ but that aside this is one of the true classics of
tacky glam.
D-A-D
– No Fuel Left For the Pilgrims(too
lazy to look up label, 1989)
Hmm, “Disneyland After Dark”. The album title is peculiar too but
these Danish rockers made some good melodic but characterful hair metal.
Mötley
Crüe – Girls, Girls, Girls (Elektra,
1987)
Dramatic return to form showcasing harder sound and image;
peerless glam masterpiece.
DiAnno
– DiAnno (Heavy Metal, 1984)
Weak and lame but with a couple of good songs, ex-Iron Maiden
vocalist Paul Di’Anno cemented his (largely undeserved) reputation as a hapless
oaf with this peculiar soft hard rock album.
Marionette
– Blonde Secrets & Dark Bombshells
(Heavy Metal, 1985)
Kerrang cartoonist Ray Zell led this sleazy, tacky, punky UK glam
band, who would have been genuinely great if he could sing. Great atmosphere
though; they tried.
Alice
Cooper – Trash (Epic, 1989)
Like his contemporaries in Aerosmith, the great Alice Cooper
seemed a little tired around the mid-80s, but the hair metal explosion gave him
a burst of energy and his best album of the decade, led by classic single ‘Poison’.
White
Lion – Pride (Atlantic, 1987)
It was easy to like White Lion in the UK; they had very little
airplay, zero presence on TV, and lots of catchy songs, despite some icky ballads.
Celtic
Frost – Cold Lake (Noise, 1988)
Despite the Swiss death-black-thrashers’ pedigree, everything
about this album, down to the reinvention of the band’s logo, is steeped in
glam. Strange, seedy, morbid glam though; and I love it. ‘Seduce Me Tonight’, ‘Petty
Obsession’ et al are not for everyone, but despite their reputation they are for some people.
Dave
Sharman – 1990 (Noise, 1989)
Obscure UK-based instrumentalist. Great guitar player but this
album lacks the character of Joe Satriani or (Christ!) Guy Mann Dude.
David
Lee Roth – Skyscraper (Warners, 1988)
Better than anything Van Halen recorded without him – all you need
to know.
Raven
– The Pack Is Back (Atlantic, 1986)
Geordie speed metal pioneers go glam in the dodgiest way possible.
Quite fun at times.
Chastain
– The 7th of Never (Shrapnel,
1987)
Attempted guitar god David T Chastain made lots of ‘alright’
albums in the 80s, of which this is one.
Shout
– In Your Face (Frontline, 1989)
Stryper weren’t bad, but if you only buy one Christian hair metal
album for your collection make it this one; tough, Whitesnake-ish riff-laden hard rock with tons of feeling.
Ludicrous but strangely nice.
Cities
– Annihilation Absolute (Metal
Masters, 1985)
Anonymous power metal – does not belong here.
Kiss
– Crazy Nights (Mercury, 1987)
Kiss may have been among the architects of hair metal, but they
weren’t above copying the style/image of the younger bands who they inspired.
They were pretty good at it, though his album features some of the worst music
of a very patchy career.
Shotgun
Messiah – S/T (Relativity, 1989)
The re-branding of Kingpin (one of the greatest glam bands of all
time) as Shotgun Messiah seemed to work, and this marginally toned-down
rerecording of their Welcome to Bop City
is still pretty great, despite the slightly drab image.
Show
N Tell – Overnight Sensation (Medusa,
1988)
Presumably one of the many thousands of club bands that managed to
release an album with zero impact, this is a loveably bad LP; the ambition is
audible, the talent only marginal.
Kingpin
– Welcome To Bop City (CMM, 1988)
Zinny Zan of iconic early Swedish glam band Easy Action went on to
make this all-time tacky dayglo masterpiece with Kingpin. It got good reviews,
made no impact and the band moved on. Sad.
Madam
X – We Reserve The Right (Jet, 1984)
The Petrucci sisters (later of Vixen) first made this silly but
good glam rock/metal LP. Fun fact; Sebastian Bach was briefly the band’s
vocalist.
Phantom
Blue – S/T (Shrapnel, 1989)
Proper, melodic heavy metal made by fashionable and pretty girls;
good stuff.
Warp
Drive – Gimme Gimme (Music for
Nations, 1989)
Anonymous virtuoso hair metal; one good song.
Steve
Stevens - Atomic Playboys (Warners, 1989)
Two or three good songs on this album by Billy Idol’s guitar
player.
Lion
– Dangerous Attraction (Scotti Bros,
1987)
Extremely polished hard rock album that is strangely obscure for
something so commercial.
Slave
Raider – Take the World By Storm
(RCA, 1988)
They didn’t, because there are only two good songs on the album.
Nice piratical image though.
Sleez
Beez – Screwed, Blued & Tattooed
(Atlantic, 1990)
Good solid sleazy glam from Holland, arrived just too late to make a really big impact.
PICTURE
2 (above, but not as high up as picture 1)
Clockwise
from bottom left in a spiral (why not?):
Guns
N’ Roses –G N’ R Lies (Geffen, 1988)
Disappointingly bits & pieces-y as a follow up to Appetite for Destruction, this is still
probably the only thing the band has released that didn’t suck by comparison
with it.
Alien
– Cosmic Fantasy (Ultranoise, 1984)
Patchy but loveable cheapo sci-fi glam.
Lita
Ford – Out For Blood (Mercury, 1983)
Debut solo album from the Runaways’ guitarist shows the glam image
in place, but the music; slightly stodgy forgettable hard rock, still to catch
up.
Glorious
Bankrobbers – Dynamite Sex Dose (Planet, 1989)
Good, tough Swedish glam,
only let down by some silly lyrics.
Guns
N’ Roses –Appetite For Destruction (Geffen,
1987)
One of the cornerstones of hair metal; but actually not as good as
it seemed at the time. The best songs are very good though.
Hanoi
Rocks – Back To Mystery City (Lick,
1983)
Great pop-rock, not really like anyone else, and good even if you
don’t like 80s hair metal.
Dokken
– Tooth & Nail (Elektra, 1984)
Often considered Dokken’s masterpiece, but it isn’t – that would
be Under Lock & Key. Still,
classy melodic hard rock with the piercing vocals of good old Don Dokken.
Helter
Skelter – Welcome to the World of Helter
Skelter (Metronome, 1989)
Utterly ridiculous German glam metal masterpiece; barely metal,
but very catchy.
King
Kobra – King Kobra III (Music For
Nations, 1989)
Not up to the usual King Kobra, Iron Eagle soundtrack standards,
but Mark Free’s replacement Johnny Edwards is pretty good and there are a
handful of pretty decent songs.
Keel
– The Right To Rock (A&M, 1985)
Middle of the road, meat & potatoes hair metal; not bad but
hard to get excited about on this occasion.
Keel
– Keel (Vertigo, 1987)
More like it; sillier, more attitude laden and with proper sleaze
anthems like ‘Cherry Lane’.
Easy
Action – S/T (Tandan, 1983)
Absolute Swedish classic, grounded in 70s glam and Hanoi Rocks;
nearly every song is great and the band went
on to star in a horror move, Blood
Tracks.
Def
Leppard – Pyromania (Vertigo, 1983)
Obnoxiously good radio-friendly hard rock. ‘Photograph’ actually did (does?) get played on the radio a lot.
D’Molls
– S/T (Atlantic, 1988)
Great attitude and sound let down by mostly weak material; 1990’s Warped is a million times better but
this is more definitively glam.
Dogs
D’Amour – Errol Flynn (China, 1989)
Scummy, laidback UK glam, influenced by Rod Stewart & the
Faces but somehow still good.
Dogs
D’Amour – In The Dynamite Jet Saloon (China,
1988)
Earlier, glammier, better version of the above.
Fastway
– Trick or Treat OST (CBS, 1986)
Classic soundtrack to the horror movie of the same name, the best
songs are like a glammed-up AC/DC.
Faster
Pussycat – S/T (Elektra, 1987)
One of the greats of hair metal, should’ve been bigger than Guns N’
Roses; there’s no justice in the world.
E-Z-O
– S/T (Geffen, 1987)
Slightly eccentric Japanese glam metal; some good songs, but somehow
surprising that they briefly made an impact in the USA.
And basically the same pics with a few more albums visible....
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)